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Bessie Barriscale

 
Actor: Bessie Barriscale
  • Born: Dec, 1884 in New York, New York
  • Died: Jun 03, 1965 in Kentfield, California
  • Occupation: Actor
  • Active: teens, '30s
  • Major Genres: Drama, Romance
  • Career Highlights: The Breaking Point, Show Folks
  • First Major Screen Credit: The Breaking Point (1921)

Biography

A major star for producer Thomas Ince in the mid- to late 1910s, Bessie Barriscale's trademark was her beautiful eyes, advertised at the time as the biggest in films. She had been David Belasco's Rose of the Rancho on the stage and recreated her Olde California senorita for directors Cecil B. DeMille and Oscar Apfel in and around the famous barn on Selma Avenue in Hollywood in 1914. But it was as an Ince star that she truly made her mark in a seemingly never-ending series of melodramas with titles like Plain Jane and A Corner in Colleenes (both 1916). She married actor/director Howard Hickman and was still a star when the new decade began. But Barriscale was really too Edwardian to fit into the Roaring '20s and she left films in 1921 in favor of vaudeville. There would be a few scattered returns but by the 1930s she was usually playing somebody's mother or maid. Mary Pickford cast Barriscale as one of her unsympathetic children in Secrets (1933); it wasn't quite the actress' swan song, but probably should have been. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide
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Bessie Barriscale

Bessie Barriscale
Born Elizabeth Barry Scale
September 30, 1884(1884-09-30)
Hoboken, New Jersey
Died June 30, 1965 (aged 80)
Kentfield, California
Years active 1913–1934
Spouse(s) Howard C. Hickman

Bessie Barriscale (September 30, 1884 – June 30, 1965) was an American silent film and stage actress, and a major star for producer Thomas Ince in the late 1910s.

Contents

Early life and career

Barriscale was born Elizabeth Barry Scale, in Hoboken, New Jersey to Irish immigrants from County Cork. Her cousins were actresses Edith and Mabel Taliaferro. Barriscale began her film career in 1913, and worked intensively for New York Motion Picture Company and Triangle Film Corporation (among other studios) until she announced her retirement in the early 1930s. In 1918, Barriscale was contracted by J.L. Frothingham of B.B. Features and the Roberson Cole Company to make sixteen films. B.B. Features was an Arizona corporation. The movies were to be completed, produced, and delivered by January 21, 1921. At this time Miss Barriscale's managers insured her life for a half million dollars against eventualities. The total cost of the features totaled more than $1,000,000.

Barriscale was enthusiastic about William Shakespeare and wanted to bring one of his plays to the screen. The actress was an excellent swimmer. In The Woman Michael Married (1919) she was featured in a movie adapted from a novel by Annette Kellerman. Barriscale went so far as to hire a swimming and diving instructor and took lessons in Venice, California. A ninety-pool was constructed at Brunton Studios where the scenes were shot. The film was directed by Henry Kolker.

In 1919, she traveled with her husband, actor, director, and film producer Howard C. Hickman and their small son, on a world tour. They anticipated producing motion pictures during their journey and traveled with a cameraman.

In 1921, Barriscale came east to play in The Skirt. The play was to travel to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and Boston, Massachusetts after opening in Washington, DC. Later the production would appear in New York City, New York. In prior years Barriscale participated in plays for the Belasco Theater in Los Angeles, California and once appeared in Belasco productions, notably Bird of Paradise written by Richard Walton Tully. She played a princess named Luana. During the early years, Barriscale was in vaudeville, with two-a-day, three-a-day, and even four-a-day performances not uncommon.

Actor Jackie Coogan purchased the home of Bessie Barriscale in Pellisier Square, Los Angeles in February 1922. The residence was valued at $45,000.

Barriscale returned to the stage in Women Go On Forever. She had been married 21 years and had a son age twenty at this time. The production opened at the Hollywood Music Box in March 1928. She played a "housewife type," and confessed to having rehearsed for the role in a gingham dress she took from the wardrobe of her Santa Monica, California home. She said she had been working at home for several years and had just learned to cook.

Death

Barriscale died in Kentfield, California on June 30, 1965. She is buried with her husband, Howard C. Hickman, at the Mount Tamalpais Cemetery in San Rafael, California.

Selected filmography

  • The Gambler's Pal (1913)
  • Eileen of Erin (1913)
  • The Harp of Tara (1914)
  • Rose of the Rancho (1914)
  • The Golden Claw (1915)
  • The Painted Soul (1915)
  • The Sorrows of Love (1916)
  • The Payment (1916)
  • The Hater of Men (1917)
  • Those Who Pay (1917)
  • The White Lie (1918)
  • The Heart of Rachael (1918)
  • Hearts Asleep (1919)
  • Kitty Kelly, M.D. (1919)
  • The Luck of Geraldine Laird (1920)
  • The Notorious Mrs. Sands (1920)
  • The Breaking Point (1921)
  • Show Folks (1928)
  • Secrets (1933)
  • Bondage (1933)
  • Above the Clouds (1933)
  • Beloved (1934)
  • The Man Who Reclaimed His Head (1934)

References

  • "Bessie Barriscale In B.B. Features." Los Angeles Times. November 10, 1918. Page III.
  • "Flashes, New $1,000,000 Star." Los Angeles Times. December 6, 1918, Page II3.
  • "Flashes, Star Will Travel, Bessie Barriscale Will Circle The Globe." Los Angeles Times. February 14, 1919, Page II3.
  • "High Dive Special." Los Angeles Times. May 14, 1919, Page III4.
  • "Flashes, Film Stars On Stage." Los Angeles Times. June 4, 1921, Page II7.
  • "Boosting For A Bard." Los Angeles Times. September 21, 1919, Page III 1.
  • "Bought By Film Star." Los Angeles Times. February 12, 1922, Page V2.
  • "New Bessie Barriscale Is In Play." Los Angeles Times. March 11, 1928, Page C13.

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